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  1. Walter Benjamin: a philosophical portrait.Eli Friedlander - 2012 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
    Language -- Image -- Time -- Body -- Dream -- Myth -- Baudelaire -- Rescue -- Remembrance.
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  • Benjamin’s Aura.Miriam Bratu Hansen - 2008 - Critical Inquiry 34 (2):336-375.
  • Origin of the German Trauerspiel.Walter Benjamin - 2018 - Harvard University Press.
    Origin of the German Trauerspiel was Walter Benjamin's first full, historically oriented analysis of modernity. Readers of English know it as "The Origin of German Tragic Drama," but in fact the subject is something else--the play of mourning. Howard Eiland's completely new English translation, the first since 1977, is closer to the German text and more consistent with Benjamin's philosophical idiom. Focusing on the extravagant seventeenth-century theatrical genre of the trauerspiel, precursor of the opera, Benjamin identifies allegory as the constitutive (...)
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  • The Flash of Knowledge and the Temporality of Images: Walter Benjamin’s Image-Based Epistemology and Its Preconditions in Visual Arts and Media History.Sigrid Weigel - 2015 - Critical Inquiry 41 (2):344-366.
  • The Optical Unconscious.Rosalind E. Krauss - 1994 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 52 (4):488-489.
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  • The Mausoleum of Youth: Between Experience and Nihilism in Benjamin's Berlin Childhood.Michael W. Jennings - 2009 - Paragraph 32 (3):313-330.
    Key sections of Walter Benjamin's montage-text Berlin Childhood around 1900 figure the relationship between human experience and modern media, with the sections that frame the text, ‘Loggias’ and ‘The Moon’, structured around metaphors of photography. Drawing on the work of Siegfried Kracauer, and especially his seminal essay ‘Photography’, Benjamin develops, in the course of his book, a theory of photography's relationship to experience that runs counter to the better-known theories developed in such essays as ‘Little History of Photography’ and ‘The (...)
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  • Benjamin’s Aura.Miriam Bratu Hansen - 2008 - Critical Inquiry 34 (2):336-375.
  • Dialectical Sonority: Walter Benjamin's Acoustics of Profane Illumination.M. M. Hall - 2010 - Télos 2010 (152):83-102.
  • Dialectical Sonority: Walter Benjamin's Acoustics of Profane Illumination.Mirko M. Hall - 2010 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (152):83-102.
    ExcerptIn a letter to his friend and intellectual collaborator Theodor W. Adorno, on December 25, 1935, Walter Benjamin describes music as a field of inquiry “fairly remote” from his own.1 Several years later, in another letter to Max Horkheimer, he writes that the “state of musical affairs … could not be any more remote” for him.2 Yet despite these claims of unfamiliarity with aurality, there are numerous observations on acoustic phenomena throughout Benjamin's oeuvre. From his early essays on language to (...)
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  • The Arcades Project.Walter Benjamin, Howard Eiland & Kevin Mclaughlin - 1999 - Science and Society 65 (2):243-246.
     
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